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In The News

Russia Says Ukrainian Blitz Foiled, India Train Crash Probe, Looted Antiquities

Photo of people lighting candles in Kolkata, India, to pay tribute to the victims of Saturday’s train crash in Odisha that killed 275 people and injured 1,200.

Lighting candles in Kolkata, India, to pay tribute to the victims of Saturday’s train crash in Odisha that killed 275 people and injured 1,200.

Emma Albright, Marine Béguin, Anne-Sophie Goninet and Chloé Touchard

👋 Saqarik!*

Welcome to Monday, where Russia claims to have thwarted a major offensive by Ukrainian forces, India launches a probe into Saturday’s deadly train crash, and Italy gets some 750 looted artifacts back. Meanwhile, Wieland Freund in Berlin daily Die Welt offers a particular German point of view on the human desire for purebred dogs.

[*Kʼicheʼ, Guatemala]

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🌎  7 THINGS TO KNOW RIGHT NOW

• Russia says it thwarted major Ukrainian offensive: Russia said on Monday its forces had thwarted a major Ukrainian offensive in the region of Donetsk, which may have been the start of Kyiv’s long-awaited counteroffensive. Ukraine dismissed Russia’s report as a lie.

• Indian Railways seek police probe into crash as services resume: India’s railway ministry has recommended the country’s top detective agency should investigate Saturday’s train crash in Odisha that killed 275 people and injured 1,200. Following non-stop efforts to rescue survivors, and clear and repair the track, trains resumed running over that section of the line on Sunday night.

• Sixty Afghan girls hospitalized after food poisoning: Around 60 Afghan girls were hospitalized after being poisoned at their school in northern Afghanistan on Monday. The poisoning, which targeted a girls' school in the Afghan province of Sar-e Pol, comes after intense scrutiny of girls' education in the war-torn nation since the Taliban took over including a wave of poison attacks on girls' schools in neighboring Iran.

• UN boosts Kosovo security: A Turkish commando battalion has arrived in northern Kosovo in response to a request from NATO for more troops to help put an end to violent unrest between ethnic Serbs and Albanians. A military convoy loaded with equipment is also believed to be heading to the Balkans country by land.

• Police detain 23 people in Hong Kong on Tiananmen anniversary: Hong Kong police said they detained 23 people on Sunday for “breaching public peace” as authorities ramped up security for the 34th anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown. Authorities have banned public commemoration of the 1989 incident, which saw China crush peaceful protests in Beijing with tanks and troops.

• World Environment Day: World Environment Day celebrates its 50th anniversary with the theme “Solutions to plastic pollution.” This year’s host country is Côte d'Ivoire in partnership with the Netherlands. Côte d'Ivoire has banned the production and use of plastic bags, supporting a shift to reusable packaging.

• Looted archaeological treasures returned to Italy: Some 750 looted archaeological treasures have been seized from the notorious British antiquities trader Robin Symes and returned to Italy after a decades-long fight for their return. The artifacts worth more than $12.9 million will go on display in Rome’s Castel Sant’Angelo museum as part of a collection of stolen art.

🗞️  FRONT PAGE

The Spanish sports daily AS says “goodbye and thank you” to French striker Benzema, who announced yesterday he was leaving Real Madrid after 14 years. The Saudi Pro League reportedly offered him more than $107.05 million to join the club this summer and void his one-year extension. The Ballon d’Or winner said he had “earned the right to decide his future” and scored a penalty in his last game with the Spanish club, leaving with a standing ovation. In other big soccer news, Swedish icon and AC Milan striker Zlatan Ibrahimovic announced he was retiring from soccer at age 41.

#️⃣ BY THE NUMBERS

1 million

Saudi Arabia announced it will cut its oil output by 1 million barrels a day in July, in an attempt to boost oil prices. The Saudi Energy Minister Abdulaziz bin Salman called the agreement a “Saudi lollipop,” a sweetener for the other OPEC+ members, and said the cut could be extended if needed.

📰 STORY OF THE DAY

Purebreds to “Rasse” theory: a German critique of dog breeding

Just like ideas about racial theory, the notion of seeking purebred dogs is a relatively recent human invention. This animal eugenics project came from a fantasy of recreating a glorious past and has done irreparable harm to canines, reports Wieland Freund in German daily Die Welt.

🐶 In one way or another, people have been selectively breeding dogs for as long as dogs have existed. That is why we treat dog breeds as if they were part of the natural order of things that are free from any association with the shameful history of a nationalist, colonialist age. But that is simply not true. Dog breeds are a product of the same era that invented the idea of dividing humans into separate races, an era when pseudoscientists fiddled around with craniometry.

🔍 In reality, the invention of dog breeds is like a huge animal eugenics project, which often has the absurd aim of recreating a supposedly glorious past. The revivals of ancient breeds such as the Hovawart or the Irish wolfhound are romantic projects motivated by a fantasy about returning to a glorious past, a Lord of the Rings of dog breeding.

👑 Sometime in the 19th century our relationship with dogs changed, partly because industrialization was more dependent on human labor than animal labor. As working conditions became even more inhumane for the underprivileged people living in the cities, dogs began to enjoy a more elevated status among the more privileged classes. In Great Britain, Queen Victoria proclaimed that her dogs were part of her family, and they posed alongside her for official portraits.

➡️ Read more on Worldcrunch.com

📣 VERBATIM

“It is undeniable that a severe conflict or confrontation between China and the U.S. will be an unbearable disaster for the world.”

— Chinese Defense Minister Li Shangfu spoke at Asia’s top security summit yesterday, as tensions between China and the U.S. remain high over various issues, including Taiwan and maritime disputes. On Saturday, the U.S. accused China of “unsafe” maneuvers near one of its destroyers, a second close encounter between military ships in 10 days. Both countries’ ministers claim to be open to dialogue: “The more that we talk, the more that we can avoid the misunderstandings and miscalculations that could lead to crisis or conflict,” said U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin.

✍️ Newsletter by Emma Albright, Marine Béguin, Anne-Sophie Goninet and Chloé Touchard


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Society

Brazil's Evangelical Surge Threatens Survival Of Native Afro-Brazilian Faith

Followers of the Afro-Brazilian Umbanda religion in four traditional communities in the country’s northeast are resisting pressure to convert to evangelical Christianity.

image of Abel José, an Umbanda priest

Abel José, an Umbanda priest

Agencia Publica
Géssica Amorim

Among a host of images of saints and Afro-Brazilian divinities known as orixás, Abel José, 42, an Umbanda priest, lights some candles, picks up his protective beads and adjusts the straw hat that sits atop his head. He is preparing to treat four people from neighboring villages who have come to his house in search of spiritual help and treatment for health ailments.

The meeting takes place discreetly, in a small room that has been built in the back of the garage of his house. Abel lives in the quilombo of Sítio Bredos, home to 135 families. The community, located in the municipality of Betânia of Brazil’s northeastern state of Pernambuco, is one of the municipality’s four remaining communities that have been certified as quilombos, the word used to refer to communities formed in the colonial era by enslaved Africans and/or their descendents.

In these villages there are almost no residents who still follow traditional Afro-Brazilian religions. Abel, Seu Joaquim Firmo and Dona Maura Maria da Silva are the sole remaining followers of Umbanda in the communities in which they live. A wave of evangelical missionary activity has taken hold of Betânia’s quilombos ever since the first evangelical church belonging to the Assembleia de Deus group was built in the quilombo of Bredos around 20 years ago. Since then, other evangelical, pentecostal, and neo-pentecostal churches and congregations have established themselves in the area. Today there are now nine temples spread among the four communities, home to roughly 900 families.

The temples belong to the Assembleia de Deus, the Seventh-day Adventist Church, and the World Church of God's Power, the latter of which has over 6,000 temples spread across Brazil and was founded by the apostle and televangelist Valdemiro Santiago, who became infamous during the pandemic for trying to sell beans that he had blessed as a Covid-19 cure. Assembleia de Deus alone, who are the largest pentecostal denomination in the world, have built five churches in Betânia’s quilombos.


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